[plug] Recommended Distro for lo spec computer? [UNCLASSIFIED]

rpowersau at gmail.com rpowersau at gmail.com
Tue Feb 8 16:59:24 WST 2005


On Tue, 8 Feb 2005 16:49:27 +0800 (WST), Shayne O'Neill
<shayne at guild.murdoch.edu.au> wrote:
> 
> xandros! I cant recomend this baby high enough for newbies, it just works,

Is there a waix download for it? 

> does it all, isnt flooded with mystery apps, and behaves in a manner thats
> not going to completely bamboozle a windows user. Plus its nicely
> integrated. Ie, mozilla/ooffice brings up kprinter for printing (meaning
> only one print subsystem to deal with) etc.
> 
> --
> "Well, I think if you say you're going to do something and don't do
> it, that's trustworthiness."
> -- George Bush on CNN online chat, Aug.30, 2000
> RIAA Copyright notice trap: http://guild.murdoch.edu.au/~shayne/
> 
> On Tue, 8 Feb 2005, Clark Julian wrote:
> 
> > Thanks everyone for your responses.
> >
> >
> > Arie:
> >
> > Thanks for the offer. If I can't persuade her to pursue a Linux
> > solution, I'll point her in your direction.
> > Personally, I'm sick of doing windows based installs. Though she's not
> > incredibly financial, I'm sure that she'd offer you something for your
> > time. I wouldn't consider doing windows for free. ;)
> >
> > I'd like to try and make my first Linux convert. ;) I don't want to
> > start my own religion, so maybe I should change the world in other ways.
> > ::grins::
> >
> > I imagine that the main barrier in this instance is that she'd be a
> > brand new Linux newbie, and I really don't want to bamboozle her.
> > A 'friend' of hers has been 'helping' her with her current windows
> > installation. She finds that he's complicating stuff no end. I guess
> > that this is the main reason I'm considering a *nix solution. Installing
> > what she needs and no more; and leaving her with a minimal menu/icon
> > set.
> >
> > Hopefully I can achieve a solution which is relatively responsive,
> > without the need for the endless cycle of hardware upgrades.
> >
> > Craig:
> > >try dillo, its tiny and works reaal well. not sure if theres a winblows
> > >port tho.
> > Cool. I'll look into it. I'd imagine it may be best to stick with a
> > major browser; (ie firefox or opera)  incase the sites she want's to
> > visit are targeted at thos browsers. People seem to forget standards.
> > Most of the time we're lucky if crappy sites works in mozilla/firefox.
> >
> >
> > Russ:
> > >I found that ram was more the issue on my 233 laptop. When I only had
> > >64M, gui's were useless. I added another 256M stick and now it runs
> > >well with kde or gnome.
> > Memory upgrades are not out of the question. I guess that I'd like to
> > find out what she's got first.
> >
> > >Point her to plug.
> > Ahh, yes but no. I probably wouldn't recommend to her that she
> > subscribes to the mailing list. I'd imagine that it'd probably be too
> > much information for her. Perhaps to let her know of the mailing list if
> > she has a problem might be an idea, but she's got minimal computing
> > expertise. I really don't want to confuse her.
> >
> > Generally:
> >
> > *Window Managers*
> > I've not much experience with other window managers though, I personally
> > use KDE and love it, though I imagine it may be a bit heavy for such an
> > old machine.
> >
> > I was thinking of a simple window manager (WM), something in the order
> > of fluxbox or icewm (or heaven forbid, TWM, actually, that's NOT a
> > consideration)
> >
> > Does anyone know what WM the computer angels distro ships with?
> > Does anyone know of comparisons between various window managers;
> > limitations and advantages perhaps?
> > (I'd Google but I'm behind a very restrictive firewall)
> > I'd imagine a limited menu structure and basic icons would be ideal.
> >
> > *Word processing / Spreadsheets*
> >
> > Any suggestions as to alternatives to openoffice.
> > I'd say she's been using MS Word and Excel for many years. My first
> > thoughts were for OpenOffice. AbiWord could also be a consideration.
> >
> > Any other suggestions?
> >
> > *Internet*
> > She's using dialup.
> > Can dialup be handled by a shell script, or are there pretty gui's that
> > do the same?
> >
> > *CD Burning*
> > K3B was going to be my suggestion.
> > It seems to me to be the most logical Linux cd burning app that I've
> > seen. Any other suggestions?
> >
> > Anyway, this post is getting too long.
> >
> >
> > Thanks again everyone.
> >
> >
> > Julian Clark
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
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> >
> 
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> 


-- 
Regards,
Russ



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